Azam like a young Kohli: Mickey Arthur

Cairns—Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur compared “young gun” Babar Azam to Virat Kohli on Thursday, saying the 22-year-old reminded him of the India skipper at the same age.
Batsman Azam has played only three Tests, narrowly missing out on a century in Pakistan’s loss to New Zealand in Hamilton this week when he was left unbeaten on 90 as the side was bowled out.
In his 18 one-dayers, he has scored three centuries, all of which came in consecutive matches against the West Indies earlier this year.
“He (Azam) is a young gun who will be an exceptional player,” Arthur told Perth’s 6PR radio ahead of Pakistan’s sole warm-up match for their three-Test series against Australia.
“I’ll go so far as to say, at the same age, I reckon he’s as good as Virat Kohli, which I know that’s high praise but he’s right up there.”
Pakistan have resisted the temptation to change and retained the same 16-man squad for Australia that lost the recent series against New Zealand 2-0.
For South African Arthur, it will be his first time facing Australia since he coached them over a two-year tenure that ended in June 2013.
He said Pakistan were ready to fire against an Australia Test team coming off a demoralising 2-1 series loss to South Africa and had learned a lot in New Zealand.
“Had that series gone another Test match, we would have been better for the conditions,” he said of the New Zealand tour.
“Hopefully, this has put us in good stead for what we can experience in Australia.”
Pakistan play a three-day pink-ball clash next week against a Cricket Australia XI in Cairns before the first Test — a day-night affair in Brisbane — from December 15.
The remaining two Tests are in Melbourne (December 26-30) and Sydney (January 3-7).
They will also play five one-day internationals in Australia.
Meanwhile, Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq expects Pakistan to perform better against Australia in their upcoming Test series starting from Dec 15 with the day-night clash in Brisbane.
Talking to reporters, Misbah, who missed out the last Test against New Zealand, due to a one-match ban imposed by the ICC on him for slow over-rate, said though it is difficult to task to rebuild a team after a series defeat but was not impossible.
Misbah also anticipated that the playing conditions in Australia would be better as compared to New Zealand, where the green pitches did not allow Pakistan batsmen to play long innings.
Misbah, Pakistan’s most successful Test captain, also gave a ray of hope to his team when observed the current Australian side is not as strong as it was in the past.—AFP